Kochs and Walmart Fight to Stop Solar Panels

Solar energy is cutting into energy profits - so led by the Koch brothers and Walmart's Walton family, the industry is fighting back. The way it
works, the Koch/Walton lobbyists get states to charge monthly fees (taxes) to people who instal solar panels on their homes. [Huh?]

Go figure. But the scam's working. People are afraid their clean energy taxes will go up, so they're not so eager to go green anymore.

A new rooftop solar system is installed every three minutes in the U.S., up from one every 80 minutes just eight short years ago. If this pace
continues to accelerate or even just holds steady, it will not be long before solar panels become visible, if not ubiquitous, in many neighborhoods
nationwide.

That prospect is enough to upset the Koch brothers, the heirs of the Walmart fortune and the utility industry, all which are trying to stamp out the
rooftop solar movement or at least make a tidy profit penalizing the people who use it. With the help of powerful lobbyists and PACs like the American
Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and Americans for Prosperity, they are set to do battle in statehouses across the nation in 2015.

ALEC, which receives much of its funding from the utility industry and fossil-fuel investors like the Kochs, has long been an opponent of renewable
energy and the Obama administration’s effort to reduce carbon emissions. It's working with conservative activists and corporate interests to fight
homeowners who are installing solar panels on their roofs. Calling people who install rooftop solar panel “freeriders,” another word for
freeloaders, the pro-corporate group is actively promoting legislation in states to charge fees, even exorbitant ones, for rooftop solar
installations.

Here's a good explanation of the "threat":

Why are conservative luminaries, corporate lobbyists, and the power companies pushing so hard against the little guy trying to save a few bucks
while helping the planet? Because even though solar energy still only accounts for 0.23 percent of the nation’s electricity today, rooftop solar is
a real threat to the very existence of utilities in the near future.

For utilities, the most immediate cause for concern is net metering policies in many states, which allow homeowners and businesses to sell back any
excess electricity they create with their solar panels. The surplus electricity goes back into the power grid and is sold to other consumers at low
rates, often lower than what the utilities charge for electricity themselves. John Eick told the Guardian that ALEC is worried about how individual
homeowners are being compensated for feeding electricity back into the system. He said ALEC wants to reduce the rate homeowners are paid for direct
power generation and perhaps even penalize homeowners for selling electricity back to the grid.

More:

No matter how you slice it, rooftop solar power creates uncertainty for the prototypical utility, mass energy provider and the corporations that build
and provide resources to these facilities. And uncertainty is something corporations and their investors do not like.

So, if you’re the CEO of a large energy utility owner like Duke Energy, or you’re the Kochs, the Waltons or any other person or institution
heavily vested in energy, you’ve got millions, if not billions, of reasons to circumvent and gut the competition. And because your chief rival is
not another corporation, but millions of individual homeowners and businesses, you can’t buy them out directly, so you buy out their government
representatives. In this era of Citizens United, nothing is stopping you from dispatching swarms of lobbyists to butter up or even threaten
politicians to do your bidding. In 2015, this is the American way.

Because it's the corporate lobbyists that pressure the elected officials and even sometimes threaten to remove existing agreements to get the
officials to go along with their agenda. Lobbyists have no place in Washington as far as I'm concerned.

True.
But it is the Lobbyists who bribe the Elected Representatives with campaign donations.

Then blame the voters.

The point being it's nothing but a feel good, ad hominem attack on Walmart and the Koch brothers to demonize them. They don't vote, and they don't
accept the campaign money.

So what? Demonize the lobbyist. Then ask the politicians getting paid by the lobbyist to pass laws preventing them from taking campaign money. And
by the way, they're not bribes. The ex-Governor in Virginia just got sentenced for accepting what where basically bribes.

The responsibility is squarely on the shoulders of the voters. If they're so apathetic and ignorant to vote based on party every election, and are
swayed by 30 second commercials and yard signs, that's their own doing.

Meh if you have the money to waste on a solar system you have money to spend on a tax.

Those systems cost more they they ever save as it is. Once those costs come down a lot, and the efficiency increases to the point it makes it worth
using, I will hop on that bandwagon, until then it is just a move people do so they can say they are green and saving the planet.

Because it's the corporate lobbyists that pressure the elected officials and even sometimes threaten to remove existing agreements to get the
officials to go along with their agenda. Lobbyists have no place in Washington as far as I'm concerned.

Then it's the ignorance of the voters who put incompetent and unethical politicians into office.

You do realize without demand there is little R & D to push that innovation in the sector, right? So no, it's not just something people do to feel
green, they're playing their part in a process that takes a while to really kick off.

Grid parity is a reality in some parts of the US and some whole nations around the world right now, and will spread to more areas rather rapidly over
the next decade.

Because lobbyists pay off elected officials and everyone but you knows it. The elected officials who have a great deal of tenure are not to be
trusted. Go to the right places and you can see for yourself that they leave office MUCH richer then when they first got to Washington. Book deals,
good stock investments and investment plans only explain so much.

Wally pays the lobbyists who pay the representatives in areas where solar power is a viable option. The paper trail is muddy beyond recognition, but
the end result of higher taxes is as plain as the sun in Phoenix.

There are obstacles that they can't seem to get around though. Schools use the panels as large carports for staff and students, and home builders who
are responsible for entire neighborhoods install them when they build the homes.

Because it's the corporate lobbyists that pressure the elected officials and even sometimes threaten to remove existing agreements to get the
officials to go along with their agenda. Lobbyists have no place in Washington as far as I'm concerned.

Then it's the ignorance of the voters who put incompetent and unethical politicians into office.

How it works is the Big Money spenders put their chosen ones in the media for the voters to select from.

What your saying is that we need to agree that the problem is not to pick the selections the Big Money Backers make, correct?

Or we could get the money out of politics all together and it would solve most other problems too including this one. Once there isn't bribe money
to be had the criminals would have to infiltrate some other organization rather than government. (Ya, I know. But a man can dream can't he???)

The voters are generally presented with two options, both of which will play ball in this situation or it will end their political career. The blame
lies with the corporate lobbyist. Remove them from the equation, and it becomes a non issue.

This content community relies on user-generated content from our member contributors. The opinions of our members are not those of site ownership who maintains strict editorial agnosticism and simply provides a collaborative venue for free expression.